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91
The 40th anniversary boxes are not just a one print run correct?  I would like to pick them up but with the Kickstarter coming soon would prefer to hold off till later in the year.  (Sorry if this has been asked before I went a few pages back and didn't see an answer to this).
They have never been talked about as a one run change, they will probably be reprinted if there is need for more production runs of either boxes before the end of the year, otherwise the next run will likely be identical except without the 40th anniversary logo on the cover.
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Off Topic / Re: What Are We Listening To: This List Goes Up To Eleven!
« Last post by garhkal on 12 May 2024, 15:02:35 »
b-52s and peter gabriel..
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Very cool!  How are you liking the metallic speed paint?  I have a project that I was thinking about using metallic paint and was considering trying those.
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BattleTech Miniatures / Re: ComGuards Black Knight "Clanbuster"
« Last post by Xan on 12 May 2024, 14:45:11 »
Very crisp panel lining!  Great work!
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The 40th anniversary boxes are not just a one print run correct?  I would like to pick them up but with the Kickstarter coming soon would prefer to hold off till later in the year.  (Sorry if this has been asked before I went a few pages back and didn't see an answer to this).
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Just to add another data point, I had a Veteran pledge ($80, Box set and three salvage boxes) + the clan invasion dog tag add on ($7.50), to the central US (Nebraska) shipping was $21.44 (not including sales tax or shipping tax).  So not a deal breaker by any means, but a little higher than I would have guessed.
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Aerospace Combat / Re: FC Naval Command Decision
« Last post by Takiro on 12 May 2024, 14:24:33 »
I am intrigued by cannonshop's idea of a ‘MechBoat Navy’ created by a bunch of ‘Mech Heads’ as a design philosophy. I could really see this as the AFFC's next step in combined arms warfare, now with Warships!

I do wonder how the Lyrans sticking around in this scenario given us would somehow mitigate this ‘Mech-Headed’ Navy??

More importantly, however, maybe the time in which we are going into (circa 3063) has something to do with our next creations.

The Overlord A3 is the first Warship Escort, or Missile Boat as I called them, fitted with Capital Missiles that indicates a definite new direction in Naval philosophy. Introduced in 3058 these fierce new Dropships should be combined with one of the InnerSphere's best weapons against the Clans, the Aerospace Fighters.

With Fighters, or at least their pilots, being on par with their Clan counterparts during the invasion despite a massive technological advantage Aerospace Superiority is something any InnerSphere power should build on. With upgrades to fighter designs coming on line at the time and a definite numerical advantage over the Clans continuing to exist for the foreseeable future I think our next design choice does become clearer.

The Durendal as a next generation Star League Riga or Clan York that would serve as an Escort Carrier type Destroyer with max dropship capacity and a large fighter complement. I’d probably put her in the 600k ton displacement range.

Amazingly this quantity over quality approach would now have me retain the Fox at least until a complete fleet is realized by the FedCom. Keep the along with the Avalon and the larger canon version of the Mjolnir (increased in size this time to appease Lyran traditionalists) giving us a nice core four classes that hopefully start to come together to form a rapidly growing AFFC Navy that has smaller warships than its Clan counterparts but will hopefully be able to overwhelm them in 3067.
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Interesting.  I wonder what the threshold is for CGL being willing to help.

My shipping costs were less than 10% of my kickstarter pledge so i didn't qualify for help.
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Off Topic / Re: What are we Reading Now: Conan the Librarian
« Last post by Triptych on 12 May 2024, 14:10:31 »
I've been on a PKD binge these past few months:

A Scanner Darkly by Philip K Dick (1977) I finally managed to snag a new print edition of this book, and it's typical PKD at his best and worst: a tremendous goldmine of ideas, yet almost undone by opaque writing. It's set in the near future when America lost the drug war. Bob Arctor is a narc whos tasked with finding the supplier of a new drug called Substance D, a powerful opiate that can split the mind in half and destroy it. Arctor is an unreliable narrator because he becomes addicted to the drug, and he ends up becoming two people: one being a leader of a small group of junkies whos paranoid about police being out to get him, and another being a narc who spies on his other self.

The book is partly autobiographical since PKD opened his house to a group of junkies and stopped writing for a few years after his first divorce when his wife left him. The writing is also dense and stilted, and I had to reread a number of passages in order to fully grasp what was going on. Nevertheless, its a mindbender of a novel, and was even made into a movie starring Keanu Reeves and Robert Downey Jr. Rating 8/10

The Penultimate Truth by Philip K Dick. I think my bookstore has me figured out. They know I buy a PKD book all the time, so they always stock another one that I havent read yet, and so I end up buying it. Damn them!

This one is a post apocalyptic tale about a group of people whove been living underground in a fallout community shelter for over a decade, building robots to send out onto the surface to keep fighting WW3, but... things might not be what they seem. If this sounds like the plot for a ton of Hollywood movies and TV shows like Fallout and Silo, thats because it is... only PKD did it first!

The first chapter, in which someone is dictating words to an AI computer thats eerily reminiscent of ChatGPT blew my mind away. To think that PKD thought this up back in the early 1960s is just mind-boggling. Sadly though, it kinda goes downhill after that. In the end, its not his best book and the stodgy writing once again makes it a tough slog, but I think its still worth anyones time purely because of the awesome ideas he thought of well before everyone else copied them into cliches. Rating 7/10

Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep by Philip K Dick- The one time I read this was when I was 12, and had discovered my uncle's stash of sci-fi books at grandma's house. I was a huge fan of Bladerunner, and I expected the book to be the same thing. Boy I was wrong.

Reading it again after all these years, I think I can understand it better now. The movie only touches on the events happening in the book, and makes it sort of like a noir detective thriller. But the book itself is far, far more. There's just so many things happening. Yes, the protagonist is a bounty hunter who hunts androids, but thats where the similarities with the movies end.

PKD's world building is phenomenal. There's empathy devices that can change someone's mood at the touch of a button, there's a new age religion called Mercerism that one can experience a Jesus-like messiah via virtual reality, and most of all, real animals have become status symbols, because almost all species went extinct due to a nuclear war, so almost everyone's pet has been supplanted with fake ones: hence the book's title.

It's all about what is real and what is fake. The protagonist kills fake things, but things are not like what they seem anymore. If you havent read it yet, and are a sci-fi fan, youve got to read it. Trust me, its that good. Rating 9/10
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General BattleTech Discussion / Re: Project Aphrodite
« Last post by Prospernia on 12 May 2024, 14:02:22 »
I looked up Inglesmond:  I like the map, but I don't agree with it being ice-capped, year-round at the equator due to its axial-tilt.  For at least a month, twice a year, the equator should be as warm as the tropics, which would be enough to melt any snow or ice.


As for Venus, even the link posted, it's more than likely Venus had about the same amount of water Earth had, just maybe 10% less than was absorbed by Earth when Jupiter fell in, disrupting the region past Mars, (6AU), causing water filled asteroids to fall in.

I've also read reports, that, Venus never had any water or rain to begin with, but, they have found granite on the planet, which is an indication that there were liquid-oceans in that's how granite forms.
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